Man arrested over Manchester bombing released
A 23-year-old was held in the small seaside town on suspicion of terror offences in the early hours of Monday morning, GMP said . Jackson tried to reassure nervous residents of Manchester that the bag does not pose a risk to public safety.

Trump revealed personal phone number to world leaders
Trump has privately pinned some of the blame for his administration's rough start on the White House's communications strategy. The sources, who have direct access to the information, stated that only Trudeau has used the number until today.

Penguins take 2-0 series lead over Predators
Guentzel was also the hero in Game 1, beating Rinne to break a 3-3 tie with just over three minutes left in regulation. I still expect more of the tight, hard/fought games we saw in much of Pitt/Ottawa series.but played at a faster pace.

Top Trump aide exits as wider overhaul expected
National security experts warn that even government-issued cellphones are vulnerable to eavesdropping from foreign governments. Presidents' phone calls with world leaders often involve considerable advance planning.

Trump 'to ditch Paris climate deal'
Trump met Wednesday with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who has favored remaining in the agreement. China is the top emitter of man-made carbon dioxide emissions, and the United States is second.

Despite Trump, cleaner energy growth expected to carry on
Other European leaders issued more explicit appeals to the US government not to abandon global measures against climate change. Some northern European countries are criticizing the US for its expected withdrawal from the Paris climate accords.

Trump to pull U.S. out of Paris climate accord: Axios
The Paris Agreement entered into force on November 4, 2016 - so this means the USA would have to stay with it until November 2019. If the United States withdraws from the accord, it would find itself in farcically lonely company .

The Juno mission, which launched in 2011 and began its first orbit past year, allows scientists to view Jupiter in new ways because of its highly elliptical orbit; it passes over the planet's poles and dives within 5,000 kilometers of its cloud tops.

"What we've learned so far is Earth-shattering".

"It does look like Jupiter has a core, but it's very large", said Scott Bolton, Juno's principal investigator based at the Southwest Research Institute. The leader for the second study was John Connerney, who is with NASA'sSciences and Exploration Directorate.

Juno is mapping Jupiter's gravitational and magnetic fields to better understand the planet's interior structure and measure the mass of the core. It will continue to do this work, barring some sort of malfunction, through at least February 2018, the end of Juno's primary mission.

It's been almost a year since NASA probe Juno entered orbit around Jupiter in July 2016. It's the first spacecraft to get a close-up look at the planet's poles. These mysterious regions are attractive and freaky, the Bolton-led study reports.

"That's the Jupiter we've all known and grown to love", Bolton said. It nearly looks like meteor craters, but, of course, it's all atmosphere. A time-lapse of the images captured by Juno has revealed that these oval features are in fact massive cyclones - some of which reach diameters of 1,400 km across. Juno, Bolton said, is fundamentally changing how we perceive giant planets, that they're possibly a lot more complex than we thought.

The data show there's more ammonia near the equator than there is at other latitudes.

NASA's Juno orbiter has been sending back stunning pictures of Jupiter for months, but now the mission's scientists are sharing their first peer-reviewed findings about the planet's previously unseen polar storms and powerful magnetic field.

Juno's measurements during the first few close passes also show that Jupiter's magnetic field is almost two times stronger than scientists had predicted. And the probe's gravity data suggest that "there's a lot of odd, deep motions that possibly are going on inside of Jupiter", Bolton said.

"That's not what Juno is showing us", Lunine says. "And they're fabulous because they're not what we expected. It's possible that they formed differently than [suggested by] our simple ideas".

The southern lights of Jupiter, auroras at the planet's south pole, glow in this animation of false-color images from NASA's Juno spacecraft. The red hues suggest emissions from deeper in Jupiter's atmosphere, while green and white indicate higher regions. Unlike the Earth, where aurorae are powered by the magnetosphere's interactions with the solar wind, Jupiter's aurorae seem to be at least partially tied to Jupiter's rotation. That analysis may take a little longer, Bolton said.

Juno is expected to make about two dozen more close passes over Jupiter's poles, so there'll likely be more puzzles to come. Once again, there were some surprises.

Some of those puzzles and mysteries are pretty obscure.For example, there's some startling new data about the spectacular auroras at the poles of Jupiter - which are like the Northern Lights on Earth but much more dazzling. If we just saw what we expected, it would be 'ho hum, ho hum, that's good but, you know, '.